The
government said that in a scenario resembling the agreement May
struck with other European Union leaders, the economy would be
2.1 percent smaller in 15 years' time than if the country
remained in the bloc.
But the economy would be 7.7 percent smaller if there is no
deal, the government said in a report.
The forecasts assumed no changes to migration rules but some
non-tariff barriers.
The hit to the economy would be bigger at 3.9 percent based on
May's deal and 9.3 percent based on an assumption of zero net EU
migration in the future.
Barely four months before Britain is due to leave the EU, May is
struggling to overcome deep resistance within her own
Conservative Party and among other political parties to the
agreement sealed with EU leaders on Sunday.
Finance minister Philip Hammond said no Brexit option would be
as good for the economy as staying in the EU, but May's plan
"delivers an outcome that is very close to the economic benefits
of remaining in".
The message from the government is likely to be echoed by the
Bank of England which is due to announce its own shorter-term
forecasts for the economy at 1630 GMT.
Both Hammond and BoE Governor Mark Carney have stressed the
importance of a transition period, as included in May's plan, to
ease Britain out of its four-decade membership of the EU.
Carney said last week that the impact of leaving the bloc
without a transition could be akin to the 1970s oil crisis for
the world's fifth-biggest economy.
(Editing by Guy Faulconbridge)
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